A US-Iran peace deal gets signed Friday near Lucerne, Switzerland. The part markets actually care about - reopening the Strait of Hormuz to oil shipments - hinges on a separate set of talks that hasn't started.
The Strait carries roughly one-fifth of the world's oil supply, which is why getting it cleared matters more to crude prices than the signing ceremony itself.
What's In The Iran Deal
Trump says the deal promises Iran never builds a nuclear weapon, though he hasn't said how. The full text - which would answer that question - won't be published until the Friday signing.
Washington won't pay to rebuild Iran. But Trump kept the door open for American business deals down the road, hinting that the long game here is commercial as much as it is about security.
He called Hezbollah a "pinprick" and floated the idea of Syria handling the group. He also criticized Israel's strikes in Lebanon, saying too many people are being killed.
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The Mine-Clearing Holdup
Trump wants the Strait of Hormuz open as fast as possible, but the Iranian mines sitting in the water don't care about his timeline. Someone has to clear them, and that someone won't be the US alone.
The Navy doesn't have enough mine-clearing ships it can deploy to the Middle East to handle the job by itself, which means leaning on European allies who already have the specialized vessels.
Those allies are asking a fair question first: what exactly did Washington agree to with Iran? Until they see the deal text, they're not committing any ships.
Mine-clearing is slow, careful work. Hunter ships sweep narrow lanes inch by inch before tankers can move through safely, which means full reopening could take weeks even with European help. [NEEDS MANUAL VERIFICATION - timeline not stated in source]
And that's just the technical hurdle - the bigger issue is risk. Until shipping insurers confirm the lanes are clear, tanker operators won't send vessels through no matter what the deal says. [NEEDS MANUAL VERIFICATION - insurer angle not in source]
So the deal that's supposed to reopen the world's most important oil passage is now waiting on two separate rounds of talks - one with allies, and one with insurers.
Worth Noting
Markets aren't waiting for any of it to sort out. The world's 500 richest people added $336 billion to their net worth on Monday, the biggest single-day gain ever recorded and pushing their combined wealth to a record $13.3 trillion.
The Dow hit a record while the Nasdaq 100 and MSCI World finished near all-time highs. Gold went the other way, sliding to its lowest level since November as traders dumped the safe-haven trade.
Central banks see that dip differently. More of them than ever say they plan to add gold to their reserves - the savings central banks hold to back their currencies - most of them in emerging markets.
That last part is a quiet bet the celebration might be early.
The deal gets signed Friday, but the oil keeps waiting.
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